How to Create Outdoor Living Rooms

An escapist environment in Columbus, Ohio

With its narrow brick streets and houses tucked between quaint shops, the historic German Village district of Columbus isn't known for elbow room. To Tim Straker, that's part of the charm. "When you live here, you don't have a big lawn to take care of," he says, "but you can have a nice garden and terrace."

Pictured: Annabelle hydrangeas against a brown fence offer a pretty background for the U-shape living room's seating and fire pit.

Dividing one yard into four rooms

Eschewing the one-big-patio idea, the homeowner divided his 50x50-foot backyard—bookended by house and garage—into four outdoor rooms filled with amenities for relaxing or entertaining. There's a dining area, with a shaded table for eight, just a few steps from the kitchen door. Opposite is a cozy seating area for two. Tucked behind screening trees and close to the garage is a south-facing sunroom with a burbling fountain and chaise lounges that rotate easily to follow the sun. Opposite lies the main seating area, featuring a coffee table that moves aside to reveal a fire pit for cool nights.

Bountiful enclave in Chicago

Talk about an extreme makeover. When Ron and Deborah Clarkson bought their home in Lincoln Park, the building was a derelict commercial dairy surrounded by grounds that were basically a trash pit. Today, it's a one-of-a-kind residence with a wonderful secluded garden shielded by aged brick walls. A privacy wall and two garages (one facing the street, another the alley) frame the backyard. From the garage, a path leads around a juniper screen to a series of three outdoor rooms. The first is an 18x21-foot potager (pictured) — an ornamental kitchen garden mingling herbs, flowers, veggies and fruit. Landscape designer Will Spiegelberg trained six espaliered apple trees to form a living fence around the center bed.

Enchanting enclosure

A brick arch marks the entrance to the alluring third room, an ivy-draped "dining court." French doors connect this inviting dining area to the kitchen. Climbing ivy softens the aged brick walls; a rusty door, original to the dairy, adds earthy character.

Your outdoor space: Smart divisions

Use outdoor materials to delineate "rooms" as you would indoors with rugs and hardwood and tile floors. Bluestone, brick and flagstone, along with mulch that holds its color year-round, mark boundaries in both yards.

Your outdoor space: Produce possibilities

This apple tree bears about 100 fruit each season. Other pruned apple trees were lashed to a framework of bamboo and leather to create a "living fence" around the potager's center bed, which yields herbs, flowers, veggies and, of course, fruit.